China’s Lenovo Buys And Diversifies To Outshine PC Rivals

Lenovo Group Ltd’s<0992.HK> bold acquisitions in its flagship PC business, a foray into mobile gadgets, and a relatively light debt load are setting it apart from PC rivals as industry shipments take their steepest fall in decades.

Lenovo, a sliver away from unseating Hewlett-Packard Co <HPQ.N> as the world’s top PC maker by shipments, posted on Thursday an estimate-beating 90 percent rise in quarterly profit, its fastest in seven quarters.

“They have been aggressive in acquiring several distributors in different regions such as Brazil, Europe and Japan over the past few years, so that basically gave them better distribution, as well as gains in market share,” said Warren Lau, an analyst at Maybank Kim Eng Securities in Hong Kong.

The Chinese PC maker posted net profit of $126.9 million in the quarter ended in March, up from $66.8 million a year earlier, based on Reuters calculations using full-year and nine-month financial data.

That beat expectations of a $110 million net profit and was the fastest pace since the first quarter of the 2011/2012 fiscal year, when growth doubled.

Research firm IDC said global PC shipments fell 13.9 percent year-on-year in the first quarter of 2013, the biggest decline since it began tracking the market on a quarterly basis in 1994, as consumers switched to mobile computing and Windows 8 sales fell short of expectations.

With shipments unchanged in the first quarter, Lenovo is outstripping other vendors. PC shipments from HP, Dell Inc <DELL.O>, Acer Inc <2353.TW> and Asustek Computer Inc <2357.TW> fell by 11-33 percent during the same period, IDC said.

Lenovo shares far outperformed those of its rivals last year. This year Lenovo, up 3 percent, is still beating Acer.

Dell and HP have staged strong recoveries, but Lenovo’s quarterly net profit has risen consistently over the past few years. By contrast, HP’s net profit was down 32 percent and Dell’s was down 79.5 percent year-on-year, according to the companies’ latest quarterly financial results.

For the full year, Lenovo’s net profit rose by a third to $635.1 million, it said in a statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange, beating an estimate of $618.2 million in a poll of 31 analysts by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.

STRATEGIC BUYS

Lenovo has spent heavily over the past few years to strengthen its PC business, with purchases such as Brazilian electronics maker CCE last year, Germany’s Medion in 2011 and IBM’s PC business in 2005.

Its slew of acquisitions has also sparked market talk that it might be interested in IBM Corp’s <IBM.N> server business, as well as handset makers Research In Motion Ltd <BB.TO> and Nokia Oyj <NOK1V.HE>.

Lenovo has declined to comment on the rumours.

Lenovo has cash totalling $4.5 billion, vastly outweighing debt of $423 million, and giving it the muscle for more buyouts.

HP and Dell have total debt of $28.2 billion and $7.2 billion respectively, compared with their cash balances of $12.6 billion and $10.9 billion.

“We expect Lenovo to remain acquisitive as it is hungry for growth and so despite high cash balances they will not hike the dividend,” said Jefferies technology analyst Ken Hui.

The Beijing-based company has shed its staid image as the maker of all-business ThinkPads, and now churns out multi-coloured IdeaPad Yoga convertible ultrabooks which have helped build its brand in China and beyond.

Though newer to smartphones than to its core PC business, Lenovo is the No.2 smartphone and media tablet vendor in China, a success it hopes to duplicate in other emerging markets such as Russia and India, where competition from Samsung Electronics Co Ltd <005930.KS>, Apple Inc <AAPL.O> and others is fierce.

“They are in the right niche markets and hitting the right segments at the right price points. But this is not sustainable in the long run unless the mobility business steps up,” said a Hong Kong-based technology banker.